London-based startup Sonder is challenging the saturated dating app market by embracing a counterintuitive strategy: a deliberately tedious sign-up process. Founders Mehedi Hassan, Helen Sun, Lenard Pratt, and Hannah Kin launched the platform to combat the “slot machine of misery” that characterizes modern digital dating, where authenticity is often sacrificed for endless swiping.
The Anti-Algorithm Approach
Unlike mainstream competitors that prioritize rapid onboarding, Sonder forces users to slow down. The founders, all in their mid-twenties, designed the app to function less like a LinkedIn job application and more like a creative mood board or a digital collage. This unstructured profile format is a direct response to the burnout caused by monotonous, formulaic dating app profiles.

“We realized that existing apps have become a very monotonous experience,” co-founder Helen Sun explains. By requiring manual effort to build a profile, Sonder uses the sign-up process as a filter: if a user isn’t willing to invest time in their profile, they are unlikely to invest effort in actual human connections.
Merging Digital Connections with IRL Events
Sonder distinguishes itself by hosting quirky, in-person events such as “Speed Drawing,” “Presentation Night,” and the viral “Performative Male Contest.” These gatherings are designed for both platonic and romantic networking, lowering the social pressure often found in traditional “on the prowl” dating scenes.
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The recurring nature of these events aims to emulate the community feel of run clubs—popularized by “productivity-maxxers“—but without the physical exertion or the expectation of immediate romantic success. It provides a low-stakes environment for organic interaction.
The Role of AI: Utility vs. Authenticity
While Mehedi Hassan works in product engineering for the AI firm Granola, he remains selective about how AI is implemented at Sonder. The app uses Large Language Models (LLMs) to analyze user profiles and suggest matches, but the team explicitly refuses to integrate AI-generated profile content.

“We want to make sure it’s an actual person putting their own effort in,” Hassan says. This philosophy has resonated with users; without any paid marketing, the app has already garnered 6,500 users in London. Currently operating as a part-time venture alongside their day jobs, the founders are now seeking funding to scale the platform while maintaining the human-centric “magic” that current industry giants struggle to replicate.
